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This one is all about “deskless communications,” which is said to be a vastly underserved sector of the work force.

San Francisco-based Zinc is carving a niche for itself in this market with something called the All Mode Communication Platform, which is aimed at this important portion of the workforce: deskless workers.

Deskless, or so-called firstline workers, are the people on factory floors, in restaurants and numerous other hands-on working environments where a computer doesn’t play a major role.

Further reading

"Firstline workers comprise the majority of our global workforce. Numbering 2 billion people worldwide, they are the people behind the counter, on the phone, in the clinics, on the shop floor, and in the field," Microsoft Office 365 General manager Bryan Goode said Sept. 25 in eWEEK. "They are often the first to engage customers, the first to represent a company's brand, and the first to see products and services in action."

These workers don’t sit in front of a desktop, laptop or even a tablet PC most of the time. They’re out interacting with customers and potential customers. They would be known as “first responders” in the emergency-care industry.

“We all use consumer apps to do this every day (messaging through Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube and many others), but they just aren’t enterprise-grade—they’re not good for a company,” Zinc CEO Stacy Epstein told eWEEK.

So enter year-old startup Zinc, which on Oct. 24 introduced Zinc 5, the first All Mode Communication Platform that it describes as “mobile-first, secure, and designed for high adoption.” Adding to Zinc’s existing modes of communication–messaging, voice, video and broadcasts–Zinc 5 now includes integrated push to talk, providing real-time communications for front line teams.

Epstein claims that Zinc, which has raised $31.5 million in venture capital thus far, is the first company to deliver all modes of communication in one enterprise-grade platform to its customers.

Zinc is All Voice-Controlled

“Zinc is all voice controlled; you’re not choosing from among eight different apps from different modes of communication. We have messaging, voice, video, content sharing, location sharing, group calling, video calling and now, with Zinc 5, we have that final Holy Grail, push to talk," Epstein said.

“Hospitality is an industry where push to talk is probably strongest, although plenty of other industries use it as well. At the end of the day, we all need live streaming audio—it’s how we all operate.”

Push to Talk can work around the corner or around the world, Epstein said. A lot of people don’t realize that with your mobile cellular phone, you’re sending audio files, which isn’t real time, Epstein said.

“With push to talk, you press the button, you talk, the person you called hears you in real time,” Epstein said. “Unlike walkie-talkies, where you have to be pretty close together, I can do push to talk to somebody in China right now.”

Using Zinc 5, enterprises can set up official groups or facilitate direct team communication through a variety of modes, including all the ones noted above. This enables quick, accessible communication for employees who need immediate answers.

Push to Talk: With Zinc, mobile devices become a globally connected two-way radio or walkie talkie. Users share information at the push of a button by streaming audio to any individual or channel and avoid using multiple devices and costly investments for radios.